View Source Req (req v0.5.1)
The high-level API.
Req is composed of:
Req
- the high-level API (you're here!)Req.Request
- the low-level API and the request structReq.Steps
- the collection of built-in stepsReq.Test
- the testing conveniences
The high-level API is what most users of Req will use most of the time.
Examples
Making a GET request with Req.get!/1
:
iex> Req.get!("https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req").body["description"]
"Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir."
Same, but by explicitly building request struct first:
iex> req = Req.new(base_url: "https://api.github.com")
iex> Req.get!(req, url: "/repos/wojtekmach/req").body["description"]
"Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir."
Return the request that was sent using Req.run!/2
:
iex> {req, resp} = Req.run!("https://httpbin.org/basic-auth/foo/bar", auth: {:basic, "foo:bar"})
iex> req.headers["authorization"]
["Basic Zm9vOmJhcg=="]
iex> resp.status
200
Making a POST request with Req.post!/2
:
iex> Req.post!("https://httpbin.org/post", form: [comments: "hello!"]).body["form"]
%{"comments" => "hello!"}
Stream request body:
iex> stream = Stream.duplicate("foo", 3)
iex> Req.post!("https://httpbin.org/post", body: stream).body["data"]
"foofoofoo"
Stream response body using a callback:
iex> resp =
...> Req.get!("http://httpbin.org/stream/2", into: fn {:data, data}, {req, resp} ->
...> IO.puts(data)
...> {:cont, {req, resp}}
...> end)
# output: {"url": "http://httpbin.org/stream/2", ...}
# output: {"url": "http://httpbin.org/stream/2", ...}
iex> resp.status
200
iex> resp.body
""
Stream response body into a Collectable
:
iex> resp = Req.get!("http://httpbin.org/stream/2", into: IO.stream())
# output: {"url": "http://httpbin.org/stream/2", ...}
# output: {"url": "http://httpbin.org/stream/2", ...}
iex> resp.status
200
iex> resp.body
%IO.Stream{}
Stream response body to the current process and parse incoming messages using Req.parse_message/2
.
iex> resp = Req.get!("http://httpbin.org/stream/2", into: :self)
iex> Req.parse_message(resp, receive do message -> message end)
{:ok, [data: "{\"url\": \"http://httpbin.org/stream/2\", ..., \"id\": 0}\n"]}
iex> Req.parse_message(resp, receive do message -> message end)
{:ok, [data: "{\"url\": \"http://httpbin.org/stream/2\", ..., \"id\": 1}\n"]}
iex> Req.parse_message(resp, receive do message -> message end)
{:ok, [:done]}
""
Same as above, using enumerable API:
iex> resp = Req.get!("http://httpbin.org/stream/2", into: :self)
iex> resp.body
#Req.Response.Async<...>
iex> Enum.each(resp.body, &IO.puts/1)
# {"url": "http://httpbin.org/stream/2", ..., "id": 0}
# {"url": "http://httpbin.org/stream/2", ..., "id": 1}
:ok
See :into
option in Req.new/1
documentation for more information on response body streaming.
Header Names
The HTTP specification requires that header names should be case-insensitive. Req allows two ways to access the headers; using functions and by accessing the data directly:
iex> Req.Response.get_header(response, "content-type")
["text/html"]
iex> response.headers["content-type"]
["text/html"]
While we can ensure case-insensitive handling in the former case, we can't in the latter. For this reason, Req made the following design choices:
header names are stored as downcased
functions like
Req.Request.get_header/2
,Req.Request.put_header/3
,Req.Response.get_header/2
,Req.Response.put_header/3
, etc automatically downcase the given header name.
Summary
Functions
Returns default options.
Sets default options for Req.new/1
.
Updates a request struct.
Returns a new request struct with built-in steps.
Functions (Making Requests)
Makes a DELETE request and returns a response or an error.
Makes a DELETE request and returns a response or raises an error.
Makes a GET request and returns a response or an error.
Makes a GET request and returns a response or raises an error.
Makes a HEAD request and returns a response or an error.
Makes a HEAD request and returns a response or raises an error.
Makes a PATCH request and returns a response or an error.
Makes a PATCH request and returns a response or raises an error.
Makes a POST request and returns a response or an error.
Makes a POST request and returns a response or raises an error.
Makes a PUT request and returns a response or an error.
Makes a PUT request and returns a response or raises an error.
Makes an HTTP request and returns a response or an error.
Makes an HTTP request and returns a response or raises an error.
Makes an HTTP request and returns the request and response or error.
Makes an HTTP request and returns the request and response or raises on errors.
Types
Functions
@spec default_options() :: keyword()
Returns default options.
See default_options/1
for more information.
@spec default_options(keyword()) :: :ok
Sets default options for Req.new/1
.
Avoid setting default options in libraries as they are global.
Examples
iex> Req.default_options(base_url: "https://httpbin.org")
iex> Req.get!("/statuses/201").status
201
iex> Req.new() |> Req.get!(url: "/statuses/201").status
201
@spec merge(Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Request.t()
Updates a request struct.
See new/1
for a list of available options. Also see Req.Request
module documentation
for more information on the underlying request struct.
Examples
iex> req = Req.new(base_url: "https://httpbin.org")
iex> req = Req.merge(req, auth: {:basic, "alice:secret"})
iex> req.options[:base_url]
"https://httpbin.org"
iex> req.options[:auth]
{:basic, "alice:secret"}
Passing :headers
will automatically encode and merge them:
iex> req = Req.new(headers: %{point_x: 1})
iex> req = Req.merge(req, headers: %{point_y: 2})
iex> req.headers
%{"point-x" => ["1"], "point-y" => ["2"]}
The same header names are overwritten however:
iex> req = Req.new(headers: %{authorization: "bearer foo"})
iex> req = Req.merge(req, headers: %{authorization: "bearer bar"})
iex> req.headers
%{"authorization" => ["bearer bar"]}
Similarly to headers, :params
are merged too:
req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything", params: [a: 1, b: 1])
req = Req.merge(req, params: [a: 2])
Req.get!(req).body["args"]
#=> %{"a" => "2", "b" => "1"}
@spec new(options :: keyword()) :: Req.Request.t()
Returns a new request struct with built-in steps.
See request/2
, run/2
, as well as get/2
, post/2
, and similar functions for
making requests.
Also see Req.Request
module documentation for more information on the underlying request
struct.
Options
Basic request options:
:method
- the request method, defaults to:get
.:url
- the request URL.:headers
- the request headers as a{key, value}
enumerable (e.g. map, keyword list).The header names should be downcased.
The headers are automatically encoded using these rules:
atom header names are turned into strings, replacing
_
with-
. For example,:user_agent
becomes"user-agent"
.string header names are downcased.
%DateTime{}
header values are encoded as "HTTP date".
If you set
:headers
options both inReq.new/1
andrequest/2
, the header lists are merged.See also "Header Names" section in the module documentation.
:body
- the request body.Can be one of:
iodata
- send request body eagerlyenumerable
- streamenumerable
as request body
Additional URL options:
:base_url
- if set, the request URL is prepended with this base URL (viaput_base_url
step.):params
- if set, appends parameters to the request query string (viaput_params
step.):path_params
- if set, uses a templated request path (viaput_path_params
step.):path_params_style
(available since v0.5.1) - how path params are expressed (viaput_path_params
step). Can be one of::colon
- (default) for Plug-style parameters, such as:code
inhttps://httpbin.org/status/:code
.:curly
- for OpenAPI-style parameters, such as{code}
inhttps://httpbin.org/status/{code}
.
Authentication options:
:auth
- sets request authentication (viaauth
step.)Can be one of:
{:basic, userinfo}
- uses Basic HTTP authentication.{:bearer, token}
- uses Bearer HTTP authentication.:netrc
- load credentials from the default .netrc file.{:netrc, path}
- load credentials frompath
.string
- sets to this value.
Request body options:
:form
- if set, encodes the request body as form data (encode_body
step.):json
- if set, encodes the request body as JSON (encode_body
step.):compress_body
- if set totrue
, compresses the request body using gzip (viacompress_body
step.) Defaults tofalse
.
AWS Signature Version 4 options (put_aws_sigv4
step):
:aws_sigv4
- if set, the AWS options to sign request::access_key_id
- the AWS access key id.:secret_access_key
- the AWS secret access key.:service
- the AWS service.:region
- if set, AWS region. Defaults to"us-east-1"
.:datetime
- the request datetime, defaults toDateTime.utc_now(:second)
.
Response body options:
:compressed
- if set totrue
, asks the server to return compressed response. (viacompressed
step.) Defaults totrue
.:raw
- if set totrue
, disables automatic body decompression (decompress_body
step) and decoding (decode_body
step.) Defaults tofalse
.:decode_body
- if set tofalse
, disables automatic response body decoding. Defaults totrue
.:decode_json
- options to pass toJason.decode!/2
, defaults to[]
.:into
- where to send the response body. It can be one of:nil
- (default) read the whole response body and store it in theresponse.body
field.fun
- stream response body using a function. The first argument is a{:data, data}
tuple containing the chunk of the response body. The second argument is a{request, response}
tuple. To continue streaming chunks, return{:cont, {req, resp}}
. To cancel, return{:halt, {req, resp}}
. For example:into: fn {:data, data}, {req, resp} -> IO.puts(data) {:cont, {req, resp}} end
collectable
- stream response body into aCollectable.t/0
.:self
- stream response body into the current process mailbox.Received messages should be parsed with
Req.parse_message/2
.response.body
is set to opaque data structureReq.Response.Async
which implementsEnumerable
that receives and automatically parses messages. See module documentation for example usage.If the request is sent using HTTP/1, an extra process is spawned to consume messages from the underlying socket. On both HTTP/1 and HTTP/2 the messages are sent to the current process as soon as they arrive, as a firehose. If you wish to maximize request rate or have more control over how messages are streamed, use
into: fun
orinto: collectable
instead.
Response redirect options (redirect
step):
:redirect
- if set tofalse
, disables automatic response redirects. Defaults totrue
.:redirect_trusted
- by default, authorization credentials are only sent on redirects with the same host, scheme and port. If:redirect_trusted
is set totrue
, credentials will be sent to any host.:max_redirects
- the maximum number of redirects, defaults to10
.
Retry options (retry
step):
:retry
- can be one of the following::safe_transient
(default) - retry safe (GET/HEAD) requests on one of:HTTP 408/429/500/502/503/504 responses
Req.TransportError
withreason: :timeout | :econnrefused | :closed
Req.HTTPError
withprotocol: :http2, reason: :unprocessed
:transient
- same as:safe_transient
except retries all HTTP methods (POST, DELETE, etc.)fun
- a 2-arity function that accepts aReq.Request
and either aReq.Response
or an exception struct and returns one of the following:true
- retry with the default delay controller by default delay option described below.{:delay, milliseconds}
- retry with the given delay.false/nil
- don't retry.
false
- don't retry.
:retry_delay
- if not set, which is the default, the retry delay is determined by the value ofretry-delay
header on HTTP 429/503 responses. If the header is not set, the default delay follows a simple exponential backoff: 1s, 2s, 4s, 8s, ...:retry_delay
can be set to a function that receives the retry count (starting at 0) and returns the delay, the number of milliseconds to sleep before making another attempt.:retry_log_level
- the log level to emit retry logs at. Can also be set tofalse
to disable logging these messages. Defaults to:warning
.:max_retries
- maximum number of retry attempts, defaults to3
(for a total of4
requests to the server, including the initial one.)
Caching options (cache
step):
:cache
- iftrue
, performs HTTP caching. Defaults tofalse
.:cache_dir
- the directory to store the cache, defaults to<user_cache_dir>/req
(see::filename.basedir/3
)
Request adapters:
:adapter
- adapter to use to make the actual HTTP request. See:adapter
field description in theReq.Request
module documentation for more information.The default is
run_finch
.:plug
- if set, calls the given plug instead of making an HTTP request over the network (viarun_plug
step).The plug can be one of:
Finch options (run_finch
step)
:finch
- the Finch pool to use. Defaults to pool automatically started byReq
.:connect_options
- dynamically starts (or re-uses already started) Finch pool with the given connection options::timeout
- socket connect timeout in milliseconds, defaults to30_000
.:protocols
- the HTTP protocols to use, defaults to[:http1]
.:hostname
- Mint explicit hostname.:transport_opts
- Mint transport options.:proxy_headers
- Mint proxy headers.:proxy
- Mint HTTP/1 proxy settings, a{schema, address, port, options}
tuple.:client_settings
- Mint HTTP/2 client settings.
:inet6
- if set to true, uses IPv6. Defaults tofalse
.:pool_timeout
- pool checkout timeout in milliseconds, defaults to5000
.:receive_timeout
- socket receive timeout in milliseconds, defaults to15_000
.:unix_socket
- if set, connect through the given UNIX domain socket.:finch_private
- a map or keyword list of private metadata to add to the Finch request. May be useful for adding custom data when handling telemetry withFinch.Telemetry
.:finch_request
- a function that executes the Finch request, defaults to usingFinch.request/3
.
Examples
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://elixir-lang.org")
iex> req.method
:get
iex> URI.to_string(req.url)
"https://elixir-lang.org"
Fake adapter:
iex> fake = fn request ->
...> {request, Req.Response.new(status: 200, body: "it works!")}
...> end
iex>
iex> req = Req.new(adapter: fake)
iex> Req.get!(req).body
"it works!"
Functions (Making Requests)
@spec delete(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: {:ok, Req.Response.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
Makes a DELETE request and returns a response or an error.
request
can be one of:
a
Keyword
options;a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Examples
With URL:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.delete("https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> resp.body["method"]
"DELETE"
With options:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.delete(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> resp.body["method"]
"DELETE"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.delete(req)
iex> resp.body["method"]
"DELETE"
@spec delete!(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
Makes a DELETE request and returns a response or raises an error.
request
can be one of:
a
Keyword
options;a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Examples
With URL:
iex> Req.delete!("https://httpbin.org/anything").body["method"]
"DELETE"
With options:
iex> Req.delete!(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything").body["method"]
"DELETE"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> Req.delete!(req).body["method"]
"DELETE"
@spec get(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: {:ok, Req.Response.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
Makes a GET request and returns a response or an error.
request
can be one of:
a
Keyword
options;a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Examples
With URL:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.get("https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req")
iex> resp.body["description"]
"Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir."
With options:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.get(url: "https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req")
iex> resp.status
200
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(base_url: "https://api.github.com")
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.get(req, url: "/repos/elixir-lang/elixir")
iex> resp.status
200
@spec get!(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
Makes a GET request and returns a response or raises an error.
request
can be one of:
a
Keyword
options;a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Examples
With URL:
iex> Req.get!("https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req").body["description"]
"Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir."
With options:
iex> Req.get!(url: "https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req").status
200
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(base_url: "https://api.github.com")
iex> Req.get!(req, url: "/repos/elixir-lang/elixir").status
200
@spec head(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: {:ok, Req.Response.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
Makes a HEAD request and returns a response or an error.
request
can be one of:
a
Keyword
options;a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Examples
With URL:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.head("https://httpbin.org/status/201")
iex> resp.status
201
With options:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.head(url: "https://httpbin.org/status/201")
iex> resp.status
201
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(base_url: "https://httpbin.org")
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.head(req, url: "/status/201")
iex> resp.status
201
@spec head!(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
Makes a HEAD request and returns a response or raises an error.
request
can be one of:
a
Keyword
options;a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Examples
With URL:
iex> Req.head!("https://httpbin.org/status/201").status
201
With options:
iex> Req.head!(url: "https://httpbin.org/status/201").status
201
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(base_url: "https://httpbin.org")
iex> Req.head!(req, url: "/status/201").status
201
@spec patch(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: {:ok, Req.Response.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
Makes a PATCH request and returns a response or an error.
request
can be one of:
a
Keyword
options;a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Examples
With URL:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.patch("https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
With options:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.patch(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.patch(req, body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
@spec patch!(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
Makes a PATCH request and returns a response or raises an error.
request
can be one of:
a
Keyword
options;a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Examples
With URL:
iex> Req.patch!("https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
With options:
iex> Req.patch!(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> Req.patch!(req, body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
@spec post(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: {:ok, Req.Response.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
Makes a POST request and returns a response or an error.
request
can be one of:
a
Keyword
options;a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Examples
With URL:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.post("https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.post("https://httpbin.org/anything", form: [x: 1])
iex> resp.body["form"]
%{"x" => "1"}
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.post("https://httpbin.org/anything", json: %{x: 2})
iex> resp.body["json"]
%{"x" => 2}
With options:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.post(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.post(req, body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
@spec post!(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
Makes a POST request and returns a response or raises an error.
request
can be one of:
a
Keyword
options;a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Examples
With URL:
iex> Req.post!("https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
iex> Req.post!("https://httpbin.org/anything", form: [x: 1]).body["form"]
%{"x" => "1"}
iex> Req.post!("https://httpbin.org/anything", json: %{x: 2}).body["json"]
%{"x" => 2}
With options:
iex> Req.post!(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> Req.post!(req, body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
@spec put(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: {:ok, Req.Response.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
Makes a PUT request and returns a response or an error.
request
can be one of:
a
Keyword
options;a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Examples
With URL:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.put("https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
With options:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.put(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.put(req, body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
@spec put!(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
Makes a PUT request and returns a response or raises an error.
request
can be one of:
a
Keyword
options;a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Examples
With URL:
iex> Req.put!("https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
With options:
iex> Req.put!(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> Req.put!(req, body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
@spec request(request :: Req.Request.t() | keyword(), options :: keyword()) :: {:ok, Req.Response.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
Makes an HTTP request and returns a response or an error.
request
can be one of:
- a
Keyword
options; - a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Also see run/2
for a similar function that returns the request and the response or error.
Examples
With options keywords list:
iex> {:ok, response} = Req.request(url: "https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req")
iex> response.status
200
iex> response.body["description"]
"Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir."
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://api.github.com/repos/elixir-lang/elixir")
iex> {:ok, response} = Req.request(req)
iex> response.status
200
@spec request!(request :: Req.Request.t() | keyword(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
Makes an HTTP request and returns a response or raises an error.
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Also see run!/2
for a similar function that returns the request and the response or error.
Examples
With options keywords list:
iex> Req.request!(url: "https://api.github.com/repos/elixir-lang/elixir").status
200
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://api.github.com/repos/elixir-lang/elixir")
iex> Req.request!(req).status
200
@spec run(request :: url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: {Req.Request.t(), Req.Response.t() | Exception.t()}
Makes an HTTP request and returns the request and response or error.
request
can be one of:
a
Keyword
options;a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Also see request/2
for a similar function that returns the response or error
(without the request).
Examples
With options keywords list:
iex> {req, resp} = Req.run(url: "https://api.github.com/repos/elixir-lang/elixir")
iex> req.url.host
"api.github.com"
iex> resp.status
200
With request struct and options:
iex> req = Req.new(base_url: "https://api.github.com")
iex> {req, resp} = Req.run(req, url: "/repos/elixir-lang/elixir")
iex> req.url.host
"api.github.com"
iex> resp.status
200
Returns an error:
iex> {_req, exception} = Req.run("http://localhost:9999", retry: false)
iex> exception
%Req.TransportError{reason: :econnrefused}
@spec run!(request :: url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: {Req.Request.t(), Req.Response.t()}
Makes an HTTP request and returns the request and response or raises on errors.
request
can be one of:
a
Keyword
options;a
Req.Request
struct
See new/1
for a list of available options.
Also see request!/2
for a similar function that returns the response (without the request).
Examples
With options keywords list:
iex> {req, resp} = Req.run!(url: "https://api.github.com/repos/elixir-lang/elixir")
iex> req.url.host
"api.github.com"
iex> resp.status
200
With request struct and options:
iex> req = Req.new(base_url: "https://api.github.com")
iex> {req, resp} = Req.run!(req, url: "/repos/elixir-lang/elixir")
iex> req.url.host
"api.github.com"
iex> resp.status
200
Raises an error:
iex> Req.run!("http://localhost:9999", retry: false)
** (Req.TransportError) connection refused
Functions (Async Response)
Cancels an asynchronous response.
An asynchronous response is a result of request with into: :self
.
See also Req.Response.Async
.
Examples
iex> resp = Req.get!("http://httpbin.org/stream/2", into: :self)
iex> Req.cancel_async_response(resp)
:ok
Parses asynchronous response message.
An asynchronous response is a result of request with into: :self
.
See also Req.Response.Async
.
Examples
iex> resp = Req.get!("http://httpbin.org/stream/2", into: :self)
iex> Req.parse_message(resp, receive do message -> message end)
{:ok, [data: "{"url": "http://httpbin.org/stream/2", ..., "id": 0}\n"]}
iex> Req.parse_message(resp, receive do message -> message end)
{:ok, [data: "{"url": "http://httpbin.org/stream/2", ..., "id": 1}\n"]}
iex> Req.parse_message(resp, receive do message -> message end)
{:ok, [:done]}